Last week, I had the opportunity to talk to Greg Brady, on his 640 am radio show, Toronto Today. The episode is on Spotify and, if you are in need of a great cure for insomnia, you can catch me starting from about the 19:30 mark:
Six and half minutes is not enough time to discuss health care in Ontario. Neither is a 1,000 word blog, but that won’t stop me from trying to expand on some of my thoughts.
The first and most prevalent thought I have is disappointment in ALL of the political parties for how they have addressed health care so far. Everyone on the front lines of health care has known for a least a decade that we need bold transformative changes in how health care is run and delivered in Ontario. Probably all of Canada.
And yet, the four would be Premiers all fail to outline a plan for such transformation. Instead, they have all resorted to that age old political vote grabbing stunt of saying “Let’s just throw more money at the problem” without actually reminding you that the money is going to come from YOUR pockets and is going to be, frankly, poorly spent.




The Conservatives hired Dr. Jane Philpott to oversee a spend of $1.8 billion in a plan to connect everyone with a “primary care provider” in the next few years. As I’ve written before, that plan, through no fault of Dr. Philpott, who I have a great deal of respect for, is doomed to failure.
The Conservatives did not start the downfall of family practice in Ontario (that was the miserable Eric Hoskins/Bob Bell duo during the wretched Kathleen Wynne years). But they sure haven’t done enough to fix the mess they inherited. Economist Boris Kralj, PhD, recently showed in the Medical Post that Ontario lost 238 family physicians in 2022/23 – the biggest loss of any province.



The Liberals for their part want to spend 3.1 Billion dollars. At least they promise everyone a family doctor and not a “provider” (and yes, there IS a difference, a BIG one between the two). However, their plan amounts to spending $1.3 billion more than the Conservatives. Spending more without changing things seems naive at best.
The NDP promise to recruit 3,500 more doctors, promise family doctors for everyone, cut red tape, establish a “Northern Command Centre” for health care (that’s actually a good idea) – all for the low low price of only $4.1 Billion dollars, a billion more than the Liberals.
The Green Party promises are actually the most detailed I could see, including lots of goodies, like recruiting more doctors, building more nursing homes, increasing nursing student spots, hiring 6,800 personal support workers and more. There is only one thing missing from the proposal (at least on their website). How much this will all cost YOU, the taxpayer.
Ontario spends $81 billion in taxpayers dollars on health care. Rather than look to see if that money is being spent wisely, and looking to transform health care, all the political parties are simply giving us sound bites. They promise to spend $83-$85 billion on the same failing system, without looking at changing things. Because spending more inefficiently will surely fix things.
OK Smart Guy – What do YOU Think Should Be Done?
Glad you asked dear reader, glad you asked. At an absolute minimum I’m looking for a party that has the political courage and wisdom to do the following three things.
First, A complete hiring freeze on all bureaucrats in health care, including not replacing those who retire, or leave for other reasons.
Currently Ontario has 10 times as many health care bureaucrats per capita as Germany. That’s too many. This means that any meaningful suggestions for change have to go through so many bureaucrats that the whole system is plagued with paralysis by analysis. Time to trim the fat.
Second, ensuring one, and only one, patient app that every resident of Ontario has, which will have access to all their health care data, and allow them to share this with the health care specialist or facility of their choice
Ontario is a digital health nightmare. Your health information often times can’t be shared if you go from one hospital to another, or one doctor to another. There are multiple inefficiencies and unnecessary repeat tests because of this mess and it should never have been allowed to occur.
It would be too expensive and too time consuming to force every health care facility to use the same electronic medical records system. What can be done however, is to force all the systems to integrate with ONE patient app. This will ensure a common standard, and moreover will allow a hospital you happen to be in, to access your out patient information (with your permission) which just doesn’t happen now.
Third, ensuring strong family physician representation at the board level of the Ontario Health Teams.
There is a lot of talk about the benefits of team based care. As someone who views one of his proudest achievements to be the founding Chair of the Georgian Bay Family Health Team, I would agree with this. The current plan for Ontario Health Teams does have merit. BUT, in order for these teams to succeed, they need strong family physician leadership at the GOVERNANCE level. That’s right, you need to put doctors (and more than just a token one) on the Boards of these teams and ensure the teams are led by them – for best clinical outcomes. I don’t see that in the plans.
Final Thoughts
My usual followers will know that I generally vote on the conservative side of the political spectrum (de gustibus non est disputandum). However, I’ve been frankly disappointed that the current Conservative government has been anything but conservative. Sadly, the other parties are really not offering the kind of transformative solutions we need in health care either. I firmly believe that we should all vote in elections, and I certainly will, but for now, call me an undecided old country doctor.
